A CHILLING relic of the world’s first wartime nuke is set to be sold to the highest bidder – with an original 1945 training version of the infamous “Little Boy” bomb going under the hammer.
Dallas-based Heritage Auctions revealed the extraordinary lot is a ground training model made for the U.S. Army Air Forces to prep flight and ordnance crews before the real thing was unleashed.
The starting bid is a jaw-dropping $25,000, with the auction closing over December 11–12.
“Little Boy” was the first nuclear weapon used in war, dropped by the US on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945.
It triggered a fireball equal to 15 kilotons of TNT, killing around 70,000 people instantly and obliterating most of the city.
Its devastating power helped hasten the end of World War II.
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Heritage Auctions said: “This is a non-functional but dimensionally accurate mock-up for use with aircraft such as the B-29 Superfortress.”
The model has been restored to museum-grade standards in its historically correct black-and-white colour scheme.
The Mk I bomb, nicknamed “Little Boy,” was delivered by the B-29 Enola Gay, which is now on display at the Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum.
It detonated at 1,800 feet over Hiroshima on August 6, 1945.
Born from the top-secret Manhattan Project, launched in June 1942, “Little Boy” was a gun-type weapon fired by blasting one mass of uranium down a cylinder into another to spark a self-sustaining nuclear reaction.
It weighed around 9,000 pounds and produced an explosive force of 20,000 tons of TNT.
When constructed in 1945, the “Little Boy” on display was fully operational.
It has since been completely demilitarized for exhibition purposes.
In 2004, the Department of Energy repaired and repainted the artifact at its Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
In another bizarre casePete Doherty once auctioned a €5,500 collector’s piece – a self-portrait the star sketched in his own blood.
The haunting artwork even includes supermodel Kate Moss, who dated him from 2005 to 2007.
It was handed to its current owner after the high-profile pair split, and now UK auctioneers Sworders are putting it on the block.
Doherty, frontman of The Libertines, is a keen artist and once admitted of his grisly technique: “Blood plays the starring role in my work — sweat and tears are often waiting in the wings.”
The portrait, marked with the inscription “Ray Heads the son”, is as exclusive as they come.
But Doherty is far from the only celeb whose bizarre belongings have gone under the hammer.
Here, Aoife Finneran rounds up some of the weird and wonderful star items that have hit the auction circuit.